‘If you’re a good worker, papers don’t matter’: How a Trump  construction crew continues to rely on immigrants without legal status  -  washingtonpost.com
   OSSINING, N.Y. —  For nearly two decades, the Trump Organization has relied on a roving  crew of Latin American employees to build fountains and waterfalls,  sidewalks and rock walls at the company’s winery and its golf courses  from New York to Florida. 
   Other employees at  Trump clubs were so impressed by the laborers — who did strenuous work  with heavy stone — that they nicknamed them “Los Picapiedras,” Spanish  for “the Flintstones.”
   For years, their ranks  have included workers who entered the United States illegally, according  to two former members of the crew. Another employee, still with the  company, said that remains true today.
   President  Trump “doesn’t want undocumented people in the country,” said one  worker, Jorge Castro, a 55-year-old immigrant from Ecuador without legal  status who left the company in April after nine years. “But at his  properties, he still has them.”
 
   
  Castro said he  worked on seven Trump properties, most recently Trump’s golf club in  Northern Virginia. He provided The Washington Post with several years of  his pay stubs from Trump’s construction company, Mobile Payroll  Construction LLC, as well as photos of him and his colleagues on Trump  courses and text messages he exchanged with his boss, including one in  January dispatching him to “Bedminster,” Trump’s New Jersey golf  course. 
    Another immigrant who worked for the  Trump construction crew, Edmundo Morocho, said he was told by a Trump  supervisor to buy fake identity documents on a New York street corner.  He said he once hid in the woods of a Trump golf course to avoid being  seen by visiting labor union officials.
     
   Jorge  Castro, an Ecuadoran immigrant, works at the Trump National Golf Club  in Sterling, Va., in October 2016.
  The  hiring practices of the little-known Trump business unit are the latest  example of the chasm between the president’s derisive rhetoric about  immigrants and his company’s long-standing reliance on workers who cross  the border illegally. 
   And it raises questions  about how fully the Trump Organization has followed through on its  pledge to more carefully scrutinize the legal status of its workers —  even as the Trump administration launched a massive raid of undocumented  immigrants,  arresting about 680 people in Mississippi this week.
   In January, Eric Trump, one of the president’s sons and a top Trump Organization executive,  told The  Post that the company was “making a broad effort to identify any  employee who has given false and fraudulent documents to unlawfully gain  employment,” saying any such individuals would be immediately fired.
   He  also said the company was instituting E-Verify, a voluntary federal  program that allows employers to check the immigration status of new  hires, “on all of our properties as soon as possible.” And the company  began auditing the legal status of its existing employees at its golf  courses, firing at least 18.
   But nothing changed on the Trump construction crew, according to current and former employees.
   A  spokeswoman for the Trump Organization said Mobile Payroll Construction  is enrolled in E-Verify for any new hires. The company is still not  listed in the public E-Verify database, which was  last updated July 1.
   The  company did not directly respond to requests for comment about the  legal status of the Mobile Construction workers, but said in a statement  that “since this issue was first brought to our attention, we have  taken diligent steps, including the use of E-Verify at all of our  properties and companies.”
   “Those efforts  continue and where an employee is found to have provided fake or  fraudulent documentation to unlawfully gain employment, that individual  will be terminated. Fortunately, among the thousands of individuals  employed by our organization, we have encountered very few instances  where this has occurred,” the statement said.
   The White House declined to comment.
   The  president, who still owns the Trump Organization but has turned over  day-to-day operations to his eldest sons, said last month that he does  not know if it employs workers who entered the country illegally.
   “Well, that I don’t know. Because I don’t run it,” Trump  told reporters.  “But I would say this: Probably every club in the United States has  that, because it seems to me, from what I understand, a way that people  did business.”
   Since January, The Post has  interviewed 43  immigrants without legal status who were employed at Trump properties.  They include waiters, maids and greenskeepers, as well as  a caretaker at a personal hunting lodge that his two adult sons own in Upstate New York. 
   [ ‘My  whole town practically lived there’: From Costa Rica to New Jersey, a  pipeline of undocumented workers for Trump goes back years]
   In  all, at least eight Trump properties have employed immigrants who  entered the United States illegally, some as far back as 19 years, The  Post has found.
   As president, Trump has  launched a crusade against illegal immigration, describing Latino  migrants as criminals who are part of an “invasion.” Such remarks  drew renewed criticism after Saturday’s mass shooting in El Paso, which is under investigation as a hate crime targeting Mexicans and immigrants.
   While  poverty and violence have pushed thousands to leave Latin America, U.S.  businesses that employ undocumented workers are also a major driver of  illegal immigration, experts say.
   By employing  workers without legal status, the Trump Organization has an advantage  over its competitors, particularly at a time when the economy is strong  and the labor market tight, according to industry officials.  Undocumented employees are less likely to risk changing jobs and less  likely to complain if treated poorly. 
    “Nobody’s  going to go and complain and say, ‘He’s not providing me with health  insurance. He’s not providing me with this or that,’?” said Alan  Seidman, who heads an association of construction contractors in New  York’s Hudson Valley, where Trump has a golf course. “They stay below  the radar.”
     Members of Trump’s in-house construction crew work at Trump National Doral golf club in Miami
  
  The  laborers hired by the Trump construction unit — several of whom live in  suburbs north of New York City — are typically dispatched by Trump  construction supervisors to different jobs, driving sometimes hundreds  of miles to a golf course or resort, according to the current and former  employees. Over the years, some passed weeks or months away from home,  bunking in buildings at Trump’s properties, they said.   Their supervisors have paid little attention to their immigration status,  even after Trump launched a campaign built around the threat of  immigrants and then used his presidency to crack down on border  crossings, workers said. 
   “If you’re a good worker, papers don’t matter,” Castro said. 
  Trump interacted personally with some of the construction workers before he was president — greeting  employees by name and commenting on minor details of their work,  according to Luis Sigua, an immigrant from Ecuador who is still part of  the crew. Sigua posted a photo in December 2014 on his Facebook page of  himself standing on a golf course next to Trump, who is grinning and  giving a thumbs-up. Sigua declined to share his  immigration status but confirmed that some members of the construction  unit did not have proper documentation: “Some yes, some no.”
   “Politics is nothing to me,” he added. “The work is everything.” 
   'Nobody had papers'   
  
  Trump’s  itinerant construction crew evolved from an outfit that used to be run  by Frank Sanzo, an Italian American stonemason from Yonkers who met  Trump in the late 1990s.   Sanzo was building a  stone wall at the Westchester County home of former New York Knicks  basketball coach Rick Pitino when Trump stopped by to talk to him one  day, Sanzo recounted in an interview last month at his home in Yonkers,  N.Y.  
   “I’m Donald Trump,” Sanzo recalled Trump telling him. 
   “I know who you are,” Sanzo said he replied. 
   Trump  had purchased a country club out of foreclosure in Briarcliff Manor,  N.Y., in 1996 and began renovating the golf course and building dozens  of homes and condominiums. The project required extensive masonry work  to build the stone walls, chimneys and columns on the clubhouse and new  homes. Sanzo said Trump hired him to oversee a crew of immigrants who  worked on the project for several years. 
   Morocho  said he was one of those laborers. He joined the crew of roughly 15  people in 2000. He said he earned $15 an hour, working Monday through  Saturday.
   “Nobody had papers,” Morocho said. 
   In  fact, Morocho recalled, Sanzo instructed the crew to buy fake Social  Security numbers and green cards in New York so they would have  something to put in the Trump Organization files. Morocho said he bought  his papers for $50 in 2002. 
   “Frank said, ‘You  can go buy a social in Queens. They sell them in Queens. Then come back  to work. It’s no problem,’?” Morocho said. “He knew.”  
   In  2002, Morocho recalled, New York labor union officials visited Trump’s  Westchester golf club to see the construction site and Sanzo told the  immigrant crew to hide for a couple of hours until they left. “We stayed  behind some trees,” he said. 
   In a phone interview this week, Sanzo said he did not remember Morocho.
   When  asked whether he told employees to buy fake documents, Sanzo’s wife,  Bernice, interrupted: “How would Frank know where to get that stuff?”
   Sanzo added, “They can get them on the street, too.” He did not directly address the question.
   During  the interview at his home last month, when asked about the legal status  of his workers, Sanzo replied: “Most of my guys were legal.” 
   He  was interrupted by his wife. “Do not answer any questions, because it’s  going to be misleading,” Bernice Sanzo admonished her husband. She told  two Post reporters: “Trump was not involved in that, in the hiring. My  husband was.”
   “Most of them were legal,” Frank Sanzo said again.
   He  said he often hired immigrant workers who returned to their home  countries and needed to be replaced and that he accepted the documents  they gave him. 
   “They gave me a social and a license. I put them on the payroll,” Sanzo said. “I don’t know if they were legal or not.”
   The  longtime stonemason, who retired in 2014 and is now blind, spoke  fondly about his work for Trump and their trips together to Mets and  Yankees games.
    Sid Liebowitz, who was the  Trump Organization’s director of purchasing from 2004 to 2013, said he  worked closely with Sanzo on many of his jobs — supplying materials, but  not dealing with hiring or payroll. 
   Although  Trump often had very detailed input on Sanzo’s projects, Liebowitz said  he believes Sanzo did not consult the real estate developer about his  employees. 
   “If he was hiring people that were  illegal .?.?. Donald certainly wouldn’t know,” Liebowitz said. “Because  Donald was in New York and Frank was traveling around the country.”
   As  Trump expanded his golf course holdings, he tapped Sanzo’s team to  assist with rock walls, fountains and cart path bridges, according to  building permits and former workers. The construction crew sometimes  stayed for months on a property, bunking in buildings on-site or in  Trump’s hotels, former workers said.
   “I used to take the crew state to state,” Sanzo said.
   At  the Trump golf course in Sterling, Va., Sanzo’s workers built a $35,000  man-made waterfall with an observation deck overlooking the Potomac  River in 2011, according to Loudoun County building permits. Building  permits with Sanzo’s name also show his laborers built a $35,000  retaining wall and a $165,000 pool house for the club in 2011. 
   Sanzo appears in a Trump Organization “before and after”  video from 2015 that showed Trump’s son Eric discussing planned renovations for the Trump Winery near Charlottesville.
   As  part of that project, Sanzo’s team helped renovate the previous owner’s  carriage house into a wedding venue and convert the estate’s main house  into a boutique hotel, according former workers and winery employees.  While on the job, the crew lived in a staff house inside the winery’s  gated property, cooking their own meals, according to former workers. 
   To the English-speaking bosses, Sanzo’s workers were reliable but largely anonymous. 
   “I  think they were Ecuadoran,” said one former manager at Trump’s  Westchester club who recalled seeing them monthly and spoke on the  condition of anonymity to avoid retribution. “They were just known as  ‘Sanzo’s crew.’?”
   In May 2015, as Trump began  ramping up his presidential run, the construction crew got a new legal  name: Mobile Payroll Construction, a new company that was registered by a  Trump executive, according to corporate filings. The sole owner is  Trump, according to his personal financial disclosures.
   The  workers said little changed except for their paychecks, which once came  from other Trump entities and now came from Mobile Payroll  Construction. A Trump Organization construction manager named John  Gruber, who had taken over the team after Sanzo retired, continued as  their boss. Gruber did not respond to requests for comment.
   Early this year, amid  news reports that Trump’s clubs employed workers without legal status, the Trump Organization  began firing them from its golf courses.
   Among  those let go was Morocho, who by then had left the construction crew  for a full-time maintenance job at Trump’s Westchester golf club.
   But  at Mobile Payroll Construction, there was no scrutiny of the workers’  immigration status, according to Castro. He said his bosses didn’t even  mention it.
   “It was like it didn’t happen,” he said. 
   'Go to Bedminster'
  Workers  on the construction crew said they have been dispatched to Trump’s golf  courses across the Northeast, such as his property in Bedminster, N.J.
  Castro said an assignment would typically begin with a message from Gruber, dispatching him to golf clubs across the Northeast. 
  “Hi Mr John happy New year,” Castro texted Gruber on Jan. 3, 2018. “Can you  please let me know when I have to go back to work? Thank you.” 
  “Happy New Year,” Gruber replied. “Go to Bedminster tomorrow.” 
  Earlier this year, Castro asked Gruber for time off. 
  “Good morning Mr John. I have a question for you. Can I take my other week of vacation,” he texted on April 12. 
  “I need you to work next week,” Gruber responded.  
  Before  he joined Trump’s crew, Castro had been a banana farmer in an Andean  village outside Cuenca, Ecuador. He said he left home in 2007 hoping to  earn more for his wife and five children and hired a smuggler to ferry  him across the U.S.-Mexico border. 
  Three years later, in Miami, he found work doing construction for the Trump Organization through Sigua, a fellow Ecuadoran. 
  Castro said little was required to start working. His colleagues who were also  undocumented, he said, helped him fill out the paperwork. When he was  first hired in 2010, he said he initially provided the Trump  Organization with a fake Social Security number. In 2015, he said, he  gave the company a valid “Individual Tax Identification Number” issued  by the Internal Revenue Service.
  “They said that was sufficient,” he recalled. 
  The IRS issues such ITIN numbers to documented and undocumented immigrants.  Employers are instructed not to accept them as proof of legal status,  said Anastasia Tonello, a New York attorney who is the head of the  American Immigration Lawyers Association. 
  “It doesn’t even check one of the boxes” for an employer verifying a new  hire’s immigration status, said Tonello. If any employer accepted such a  document, she said, “they wouldn’t be taking [the process] very  seriously.” 
  The U.S. government says that  employers must accept only immigration and identity documents that  “reasonably appear to be genuine.” 
  [ The president’s sons entrusted their private hunting retreat to a caretaker. He was working in the country illegally.]
   The  laborers who worked for the roving construction crew were familiar with  the style that Trump used at his properties. They knew which carpet  Trump wanted in his ballrooms and that walls should be painted a certain  shade of eggshell white that Trump had seen on a visit one day to  Sanzo’s daughter’s home, according to Sanzo. 
    “You’re  paying for the convenience of having these individuals that didn’t have  to be trained,” said a former manager at Trump’s golf course in Colts  Neck, N.J., who spoke on the condition of anonymity to protect his  privacy. 
   By using in-house workers, the Trump Organization could also avoid  some permitting costs on their project. And undocumented employees are  less likely to demand better pay or jump to competing employers,  industry experts said.
   Trump “was saving a lot  of money with us,” said Castro, whose paychecks show that he made $19 an  hour beginning in 2016, which increased to $21 an hour in 2018. He said  he did not get health insurance or other benefits.
   Castro’s  attorney, Anibal Romero, said he had filed a complaint with the New  York Labor Department — and planned to file another with the federal  Labor Department — alleging that Castro was denied some overtime wages  and health benefits because he was undocumented.
   Castro’s  salary matches the hourly mean wage of stonemasons in the New York  area, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics. But one former  carpenter on Trump’s construction unit said he now earns twice his  former salary doing similar work for a union crew. 
   “The  salary for that work was very low,” said the carpenter, who said that  after working for Trump for 12 years — from 2006 to 2018 — his salary  increased by only $5 per hour, to a final rate of $19 per hour. “That’s  why I left.”
   The work was often grueling: long hours under the sun laying bricks or breaking rocks or digging trenches. 
   “To  compare it to the company where I’m working now, this is much better,”  said the carpenter, who spoke on the condition of anonymity to speak  candidly about Trump. 
   But he said he values the skills and experience he gained. 
   “To  work in the Trump company, for me, I learned a lot,” he said. “When I  started, I didn’t know much. I couldn’t even speak English.” 
   Since  Trump was elected, the pace of his company’s acquisitions and  renovations slowed considerably. His properties also began relying more  on outside contractors who would bring in their own employees, according  to former members of the in-house crew. 
   What  used to be a crew of 25 to 30 workers has dropped to fewer than 10,  they say. Trump’s construction crew now does mostly routine fix-it tasks  or minor renovations, according to one current and two former  construction workers. 
   Sigua, who currently lives in Miami, said some weeks he does maintenance work at Trump’s National Doral resort, and then goes elsewhere.  
  “We don’t stay in one place,” he said. |